Description

Health, illness, and treatment are conditions that touch all human beings; therefore, all societies must address them by developing medical knowledge, training practitioners, preventing illness, and caring for those who nevertheless become ill. When human beings become ill, many challenges often lie before them. Doctors and other health specialists are sought out, therapeutic options are negotiated and agreed upon, family life is coordinated, etc.

In particular, the Anthropology of Health looks at how human beings’ efforts to secure health and treat illness are shaped by and contingent on local, national, and international institutions and political processes, and how inequalities in health are thereby created, maintained, or challenged. Another important focus is the use of new biomedical technologies that often raise difficult medical, moral and socioeconomic questions. In this way, during the last decades, the Anthropology of Health has become a well-established and internationally recognized subdiscipline within anthropology, while it has remained a central point of departure for research of societies and cultures in general.

Courses that may be offered in the specialisation track in Anthropology of Health include:

Career Opportunities

Anthropologists typically work in positions where they can use their
analytical skills, coordination skills, and their ability to detect how
procedures develop in the workplace. The following is a list of some of the career opportunities available for anthropologists:

Consulting work and project work, including qualitative studies,
analysis, project leadership, planning and evaluation in both the
private and public sectors

Integration-related work for municipalities and for NGO’s

Product and market development and management

User-driven innovation for private firms and municipalities

Teaching and outreach at universities, municipal primary and lower secondary school, museums or at newspapers

Intercultural communication in international companies and organisations

Development work in Denmark and abroad

Research

Admission

To be admitted to this programme, you must use a digital application system in order to apply for the MSc in
Anthropology. Apply directly at University of Copenhagen with all relevant documentation. You can not use paper application forms. If you are EU/EEA or Swiss citizen you can read more about application procedures here

For Non-EU/EEA citizens you find the relevant information about application procedures hereIn addition, documentation may be required verifying that your proficiency in English is at a specified level. Read about the language requirements of University og Copenhagen To find out whether the level of your foreign certificate or diploma satisfies the general entry requirements, you should contact University of Copenhagen directly. A list of the most commonly recognized exams and diplomas can be found at the Danish Agency for Higher Education http://en.ufm.dk/recognition

Exchange students should contact their home institution for information on application procedures and deadlines.

Tuition

There is a tuition fee for all full-time degree students who hold a citizenship from outside EU/EAA/Switzerland. Students within an exchange programme are not required to pay tuition.

For Further Information

Information from the Danish Agency for Higher Education can be located at http://en.ufm.dk/

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